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Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2025
Worked great
JOHN Buer
Reviewed in Canada on January 30, 2025
Looks good
Alexander V. Beltran
Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2025
Worked as advertised
Jo
Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2024
This product is not 4 inches in diameter, so won’t fit and won’t work! Poor quality control by company and a waste of money. See photos.
jose
Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2024
Bolted to back of sand blaster to connect duct and hose to clear out dust from cabinet. Fit perfect.
norm
Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2024
It did accept my 5 inch air conditioner hose ,reason for five star rating . The plastic is thin .For 12 bucks you would expect twice the quality.
MadWolf Farmacy
Reviewed in the United States on July 17, 2024
It works as a replacement for the Toshiba portable A/c unit.
Early adopter
Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2024
Used this to fit dryer duct to a roof vent. Worked like a champ. Sturdy enough.
Customer
Reviewed in Canada on December 18, 2024
Worked for use with 3 inch
Maxime Demers
Reviewed in Canada on November 11, 2024
Fit really well to the heater and help me pass thru the wall and keep it water résistant
Reaxions
Reviewed in the United States on December 22, 2023
I bought this to use with a modular custom 6" exhaust vent duct for a portable AC unit in a dedicated, climate controlled media equipment closet, and it worked perfectly. My first portable AC unit in the closet quit working after about 5 years, so I had to replace it. Unfortunately, the new AC unit came with a different type of exhaust hose attachment, even though both units were LGs, and I stupidly built the first exhaust duct to last forever. Since I needed to recreate part of the exhaust duct because of the different AC exhaust hose attachment types, I upgraded the 6" inline exhaust fan I'd been using to help push the exhaust about 20' to an external wall, as I wasn't sure how much longer the original fan would last and they're relatively cheap. Additionally, I wanted to install a one-way butterfly baffle to prevent any cold air from coming back into the closet while the AC exhaust wasn't running, which I hadn't done before. And, because I've recently begun to fully appreciate that everything will eventually need to be replaced at some point, I wanted to make the exhaust duct as modular as possible, because connecting flexible ducts to portable AC exhaust hoses, inline fans, and one-way baffles is a time consuming nightmare. So, I added an insulated adhesive gasket between the two pieces of this duct connector, and superglued some screws onto one of the pieces, then used nuts to hold them together. This way, I won't have to tear the whole exhaust duct apart again just to replace one part of it, should something fail again (portable AC, inline fan, baffle, etc.).
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